Chitty Chitty Bang Bang review – fine-tuned revival is truly scrumptious

West Yorkshire Playhouse, Leeds
The musical adaptation flies higher and farther than ever before thanks to scintillating choreography, precipitous video design and a fluid steampunk set

Ian Fleming’s second most famous creation first appeared on stage in 2002, in an adaptation by Jeremy Sams that took some liberties with the original novel while emphasising that it sprang from the man who perfected the modern spy thriller. Consider the elements: a Mitteleuropean villain who fondles a white teddy bear, an attractive companion with a Truly Scrumptious name, and a car equipped with all the latest Q-approved gadgets for flight and flotation. The name’s Bang Bang. Chitty Chitty Bang Bang.

Melancholy … Amy Griffiths as Truly Scrumptious.
Melancholy … Amy Griffiths as Truly Scrumptious. Photograph: Alastair Muir

Plausibility has never been the show’s strong point, of course, though James Brining’s new production, which will tour nationally in the new year, is pitched just right. The longueurs of the second half have been particularly addressed: Stephen Mear’s choreography is so scintillating that the circumstantial samba sequence becomes a highlight rather than a hindrance, and Ms Scrumptious’s contemplative solo, Lovely Lonely Man, has been reinstated. Beautifully delivered by Amy Griffiths, it taps into the underlying melancholy of the tale, in which the madcap adventures of Caractacus Potts (the affable Jon Robyns) are a means of deflecting his grief for a missing wife and mother.

If the original production hinged on convincing you a car could fly, this one proves it can fly higher and further than ever before, thanks to the combination of Simon Higlett’s steampunk set and a precipitous video design by Simon Wainwright that genuinely causes your stomach to plunge as the family overshoots Beachy Head. Above all, it’s one of those rare shows whose thematic message of teamwork and pulling together is borne out by the seamless fluidity of the staging. For the ultimate sugar rush, I can only recommend that you purchase a ticket Toot Sweet.

Contributor

Alfred Hickling

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Chitty Chitty Bang Bang’s not so pretty origins
Letters: Soldiers in the Far East had to ask for a permission slip, a chitty, to leave the barracks and visit the local brothels

Letters

18, Dec, 2015 @5:30 PM

Article image
Anna Karenina review – grand passion and domestic discomfort in superb revival
Jo Clifford and Ellen McDougall’s superb take on Tolstoy’s novel works superbly – as if a vast five-act opera has been reorchestrated as a string quartet

Alfred Hickling

25, Mar, 2015 @11:29 AM

Article image
Untold Stories review – a fluid revival of Alan Bennett's double bill

Reece Dinsdale is the ultimate doppelganger and Marjorie Yates delights as Mam in this staging of the author's childhood memoirs, writes Alfred Hickling

Alfred Hickling

11, Jun, 2014 @2:06 PM

Article image
The Glass Menagerie review – a revival to remember for drama of family's fragility
Tennessee Williams’s memory play is boldly staged by Ellen McDougall with strong performances from a cast including Greta Scacchi

Alfred Hickling

21, Sep, 2015 @11:54 AM

Yerma – review
This new version of Lorca's play about the despair of infertility is sublimely directed and well acted, says Alfred Hickling

Alfred Hickling

14, Mar, 2011 @6:12 PM

Article image
Aladdin – review
The plot was untouched, but Aladdin alighted brilliantly in the new surroundings of Leeds market hall, writes Alfred Hickling

Alfred Hickling

20, Dec, 2010 @9:30 PM

Article image
Crash – review

Despite being full of grandstanding speeches about bankers and responsibility, William Nicholson's play Crash, at the West Yorkshire Playhouse in Leeds, seldom sparks into life, writes Lyn Gardner

Lyn Gardner

21, Oct, 2010 @8:29 PM

Article image
Annie – review
The local girls steal the show in this Annie that revels in pure fantasy, writes Alfred Hickling

Alfred Hickling

01, Dec, 2011 @5:47 PM

Article image
Refugee Boy – review

It is impossible not to become deeply engaged by this tale of a young Ethiopian-Eritrean boy attempting to find his feet in Britain, writes Alfred Hickling

Alfred Hickling

15, Mar, 2013 @5:33 PM

Article image
Doctor Faustus – review

This modern take on Marlowe is so distinctive that you are prepared to forgive its weaknesses, writes Lyn Gardner

Lyn Gardner

28, Feb, 2013 @1:08 PM